Harrison James J, Sumner Petroc, Dunn Matt J, Erichsen Jonathan T, Freeman Tom C A
School of Psychology, Cardiff University, Cardiff, United Kingdom.
School of Psychology, Cardiff University, Cardiff, United Kingdom Cardiff University Brain Research Imaging Centre (CUBRIC), School of Psychology, Cardiff University, Cardiff, United Kingdom.
Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci. 2015 Feb 10;56(3):1594-600. doi: 10.1167/iovs.14-15655.
Infantile nystagmus (IN) is a pathological, involuntary oscillation of the eyes consisting of slow, drifting eye movements interspersed with rapid reorienting quick phases. The extent to which quick phases of IN are programmed similarly to saccadic eye movements remains unknown. We investigated whether IN quick phases exhibit 'saccadic inhibition,' a phenomenon typically related to normal targeting saccades, in which the initiation of the eye movement is systematically delayed by task-irrelevant visual distractors.
We recorded eye position from 10 observers with early-onset idiopathic nystagmus while task-irrelevant distractor stimuli were flashed along the top and bottom of a large screen at ±10° eccentricity. The latency distributions of quick phases were measured with respect to these distractor flashes. Two additional participants, one with possible albinism and one with fusion maldevelopment nystagmus syndrome, were also tested.
All observers showed that a distractor flash delayed the execution of quick phases that would otherwise have occurred approximately 100 ms later, exactly as in the standard saccadic inhibition effect. The delay did not appear to differ between the two main nystagmus types under investigation (idiopathic IN with unidirectional and bidirectional jerk).
The presence of the saccadic inhibition effect in IN quick phases is consistent with the idea that quick phases and saccades share a common programming pathway. This could allow quick phases to take on flexible, goal-directed behavior, at odds with the view that IN quick phases are stereotyped, involuntary eye movements.
婴儿型眼球震颤(IN)是一种病理性的、不自主的眼球振荡,由缓慢的、漂移的眼球运动组成,其间穿插着快速的重新定向的快相。IN的快相与扫视性眼球运动的编程方式相似的程度尚不清楚。我们研究了IN的快相是否表现出“扫视抑制”,这是一种通常与正常目标扫视相关的现象,即眼球运动的启动会被与任务无关的视觉干扰物系统性地延迟。
我们记录了10名早发性特发性眼球震颤观察者的眼球位置,同时在一个大屏幕的顶部和底部以±10°的离心率闪现与任务无关的干扰刺激。测量了相对于这些干扰闪光的快相潜伏期分布。还对另外两名参与者进行了测试,一名可能患有白化病,一名患有融合发育不良性眼球震颤综合征。
所有观察者均显示,干扰闪光延迟了快相的执行,否则快相大约会在100毫秒后出现,这与标准的扫视抑制效应完全相同。在所研究的两种主要眼球震颤类型(单向和双向 jerk 的特发性 IN)之间,延迟似乎没有差异。
IN快相中存在扫视抑制效应,这与快相和扫视共享共同编程途径的观点一致。这可能使快相具有灵活的、目标导向的行为,这与IN快相是刻板的、不自主的眼球运动的观点相悖。